Partnerships + Collaborations

Message in a Bottle

09/15/2011

Professor Ellen Driscoll scrub, cut, melted and fused thousands of used water and milk bottles to create DISTANT MIRRORS, a new floating installation in the Providence River.

Using thousands of recycled
water and milk bottles, Professor and Head of Sculpture Ellen Driscoll has created an ambitious new work of public art for Providence’s waterfront. The “archipelago of floating forms” has literally
transformed a section of the Providence River near the south end of RISD’s
campus after it was unveiled on Saturday, September 17. Called Distant
Mirrors, the installation
reflects on the past and present by looking at Rhode Island’s history in light
of contemporary conditions, and vice versa.

Driscoll addresses issues
of sustainability and consumption through a cluster of plastic, manmade
“islands” representing geographic land masses – haunting, delicate forms that
evoke the New World utopia of colonial-era America along with its 21st-century
distopia, fueled by our oil-based economy. She says that after winning a Robert
and Margaret McColl Johnson Fellowship from the Rhode Island Foundation she set
out to create “a simple visual allegory for the predicaments of over-consumption
and reckless profiteering at the expense of egalitarian values.”

For Distant Mirrors, Driscoll relied on help from Rose Heydt, Dianne Hebbert,
Ponnapa Prakkamakul and Megan McLaughlin, and collaborated with
several local groups, including the Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corporation
– the state landfill and recycling facility that supplied her with mountains of used beverage bottles. She also worked closely with Jennifer Smith, site manager at Roger Williams National Memorial
just north of RISD’s campus.

Rhode
Island’s founder, Roger Williams, actually figures significantly in the piece
since the largest of the geographic forms Driscoll created is a floating map of
the 52 plots of land that Williams apportioned to those who shared his beliefs
in egalitarianism and separation of church and state. The religious radical envisioned
a utopian community in the new colony he founded, but due to political
conflict, profit-seeking and the colonization of indigenous populations, “the
community was eventually destroyed, acting as a haunting tale for our own
time,” Driscoll points out.

After a few weeks, the
initial floating map will be replaced by another one representing
the crowded McMansions and triple-deckers that pepper our contemporary
landscape. Both large maps are complemented by two floating forms in the shape of North America surrounded by
smaller maps of oil fields in Venezuela, Mexico, Canada, Nigeria and Saudia
Arabia – the top five suppliers of crude oil to the US.

“Distant Mirrors asks viewers to look at the butterfly effect of our simplest actions,”
Driscoll says: “Drinking milk or water from a plastic bottle, produced by oil. Who
do we see in the distant mirror as we do so?”

View the piece from the South Water Street Bridge in Providence, near Hemenway’s Restaurant. (map)